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For three nights, the House of Blues Chicago stage was adorned with a plush, dark red carpet and various black risers. The pièce de résistance hanging several feet in the air changed each night: night one, the face of a porcelain doll; night two, a bleeding heart; and night three, a box-shaped face. The part of the stage that stayed the same were the four musicians that played across it.
The Used formed in 2000, first hitting the scene with their 2002 self-titled LP that received critical acclaim. They were one of several alternative artists that found their songs entering the charts and bringing forth the biggest wave of emo that the scene ever saw. It may not have always been a genre associated with a positive connotation, but for three nights in Chicago they happily told the audience exactly who they were.
“We are a fucking emo band!” Lead vocalist Bert McCracken called out to the crowd on night two. “And we’ve been an emo band for 25 fucking years. And unlike some other bands out there we never broke up or took a break; we’ve been here the whole time.”
They originally announced a string of shows to celebrate their 25th anniversary with three nights in Chicago at the end of April, but high demand allowed them to announce three more nights a few weeks sooner, meaning the tour kicked off in Chicago on March 30 to a sold-out crowd.
The concept was simple: each night they would play a different album from front to back. The Used, In Love and Death and Lies for the Liars were not only their first three albums but the ones that brought them to such important places. By playing these albums in full, it became three nights of saying thank you to the people that gave those albums a life beyond the studio.
Each night, a brief introduction brought the crowd together. A projection of a TV/VCR combo played three montages of life during each release: touring, studio sessions, confessional interviews and more before cutting to a copy of the CD. Manicured hands opened the plastic case and displayed each page of the booklet before placing it back in the sleeve and closing it. The curtain fell, and the first song began.
Night one in Chicago saw a crowd that has been there since the beginning. They mimicked every drum solo, clapped along to every beat and surfed the crowd as frequently as they could. Night two was the crowd that screamed every single word back at McCracken. They felt the lyrics as strongly now as they did in 2004. Night three was much more intimate; die-hard fans referencing hidden tracks from the album and joining the band on stage to dance along.
From witnessing all three nights, two things were apparent: The Used have never sounded better and have never looked happier. The vocals, particularly the harmonies, were sharp enough to cut glass. The drumming was seamless. Every time McCracken addressed the crowd, it was with genuine gratitude. There were maybe a handful of moments where he was not sporting a wide smile. Memories were made every night.
25 years and 10 studio albums later, The Used knows their audience. Getting to watch the band perform their first three albums in full was a special night for everyone. It was three nights of reminiscing; bringing everyone back to that childhood state where emo was the most important thing to happen to us. These albums were important to us and forever remain a part of our stories.